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Thursday, October 31, 2019

New Threats Put Wildfire Fighters’ Health on the Line - The New York Times

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SANTA ROSA, Calif. — As fires spread across Northern California last year, Capt. Matt Alba and Strike Team 2253A found themselves wading through a smoldering jungle of plastic and metal in search of bodies.

As they worked through charred auto shops and trailers, Mr. Alba kept thinking about the poisons they were kicking up, and that they did not have a single mask or hazmat suit among them.

Wildfire fighting had changed.

For generations, firefighters fought mostly in desolate forests, where most of the dangers were fatigue and falling trees. But a confluence of modern factors — namely America’s rapid suburban expansion into the wilderness, combined with the growing ferocity of wildfires — is posing a host of new health threats to the men and women who fight these blazes.

While burning wood poses some threat to lungs, man-made products and the gases and particles they produce when burned are far more dangerous.

In the last three years, California has seen a record number of devastating fires, and thousands of firefighters have been exposed to chemicals they had not previously encountered in such high volumes.

Image
Credit...Jim Wilson/The New York Times
Image
Credit...Jim Wilson/The New York Times

Unlike urban firefighters dealing with structural blazes, these wildfire responders do not wear heavy gear that filters air or provides clean air because the gear is unwieldy and too limited to allow the kind of multi-hour, high-exertion efforts demanded on the front lines of these large outdoor infernos.

But some think more needs to be done to keep wildland firefighters safe.

Mr. Alba, who has been with the San Francisco Fire Department for 18 years, spent 11 days working in Paradise, Calif., last year, in a smog so thick it burned his lungs. As he picked his way through the wreckage, he said, his crew began to fall sick: severe headaches, brutal coughs.

“I was just thinking about 9/11,” he said of the many firefighters who fell ill after the 2001 terrorist attacks. “I asked myself: Is history repeating itself here?”

On Thursday, California’s fight against fire continued. More than 7,000 firefighters were battling blazes up and down the state, including new wildfires in the heavily populated areas of Riverside and San Bernardino Counties, fueled by rushing winds that for days have pushed flames through brush and dry fields and up the sides of homes.

The fires began just as winds eased in the north and firefighters wrangling the state’s largest active blaze, the Kincade fire, managed to contain more than half of its 76,800-acre footprint for the first time.

Image
Credit...Max Whittaker for The New York Times

About 5,800 people remained under a mandatory evacuation order, a small fraction of the 180,000 who had been ordered to leave their homes on Sunday. Residents and firefighters were beginning to survey the damage on Thursday as many in Northern California and parts of Southern California began to return home.

Several studies have examined the health of firefighters who battle structural blazes in urban areas. The largest, a look at 30,000 people by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, acknowledged that urban firefighters may be exposed to carcinogens like formaldehyde, benzene and asbestos, and found that firefighters have higher rates of several types of cancers than the population as a whole.

This has led some health advocates to declare an “epidemic” of cancer among urban firefighters, and to call for better equipment and health care.

Less is known about the health of wildland firefighters. Though that is changing.

Following the 2017 Tubbs fire that whipped through the Santa Rosa area, researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, working with the San Francisco Firefighters Cancer Prevention Foundation, analyzed blood and urine samples of about 150 firefighters. They found that in their blood many had elevated levels of mercury, as well as perfluoroalkyl substances, human-made chemicals known as PFAS, which have been linked to cancer.

Researchers said that the chemicals may have come off the buildings, or even the firefighters’ gear. PFAS, an increasingly controversial class of chemicals that are used as fire retardants, are often present in firefighter uniforms.

The exposure is compounded by dangers that firefighters have faced for years.

Image
Credit...Eric Thayer for The New York Times
Image
Credit...Max Whittaker for The New York Times

In Northern California this month, more than 5,000 firefighters and support staff gathered to fight the Kincade fire, turning the Sonoma County fairgrounds into base camp, a sea of white tents and dirt-smudged firefighters taking breaks from their 24-hour shifts.

The morning briefing included tips on avoiding exhaustion and falling trees — and a warning to watch out for the region’s abandoned mercury mines. (For decades starting around the 1870s, mercury was pulled from the ground and used to separate gold from other rocks. Many of those mines were never fully cleaned up.)

A flier handed out to firefighters said the mines posed “no health or inhalation hazards” if they were exposed to fire, as they had been capped with soil. But officials at the federal Bureau of Land Management said that was incorrect — that at least three of the mines had exposed waste that could be dangerous if hit by heat. (Cal Fire, the state firefighting agency, later issued a corrected version of the flier.)

More modern threats come from the growth of the country’s wildland-urban interface, a term increasingly used to describe the area where homes and forests meet.

As cities have become more expensive, these areas have become increasingly attractive places to settle, and more than 12 million homes were built in this liminal space between 1990 and 2010. With more people in the woods, there are more structures to defend.

More than 80 people died in the Camp fire near Paradise last year; most lived in areas that were basically wilderness. Firefighters now have to contend with protecting people who live in areas that some consider uninhabitable and the fallout of homes burning in these isolated locations.

At base camp in Sonoma, many said they were aware of these expanding chemical dangers. Cal Fire has a research and development team that is working to develop better gear for firefighters, said Eric Castellanos, a captain with the department.

But there is division among firefighters about exactly what should be done to protect them. Mr. Alba, the firefighter who was in Paradise, is calling on fire agencies to remove PFAS from their uniforms, and for officials to come up with a solution that protects them from noxious threats.

But Scott Ross, a firefighter from Shasta County, said he worried that more restrictions — heavier gear, for example — would make it harder for them to do their work.

“This is not a safe job,” he said. “You can’t make it safe. And the more you try, the more you tie our hands.”

Tim Arango contributed reporting from Los Angeles, Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs from New York and Matt Richtel from San Francisco.

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New Threats Put Wildfire Fighters’ Health on the Line - The New York Times
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49ers vs. Cardinals odds, line: Thursday Night Football picks, predictions from top-rated model on 87-60 run - CBSSports.com

The unbeaten San Francisco 49ers put their 7-0 record on the line on Thursday Night Football when they visit the 3-4 Arizona Cardinals at 8:20 p.m. ET at State Farm Stadium. The Niners are one of the most surprising teams in football and rolled over Carolina, 51-13, last week. San Francisco quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo has passed for 1,489 yards and nine touchdowns, hitting nine different receivers for those scores. The Cardinals saw a three-game winning streak snapped last week by the Saints, who welcomed quarterback Drew Brees back in a 31-9 victory. The 49ers are 5-2 against the spread this season, but are trying to break an eight-game losing streak to the Cardinals, while Arizona is 5-3 against the number. San Francisco is a 10-point favorite in the latest 49ers vs. Cardinals odds after the line opened at eight. The over-under, or total number of points Vegas thinks will be scored, is 43. Before you make any Cardinals vs. 49ers picks of your own, you need to see what the SportsLine Projection Model has to say.

The model, which simulates every NFL game 10,000 times, is up almost $7,000 for $100 players on its top-rated NFL picks since its inception four years ago. It has nailed its recent top-rated NFL picks, entering Week 9 of the 2019 NFL schedule on a strong 25-17 run that dates back to last season. 

It's also on an incredible 87-60 roll on top-rated NFL picks that dates back to the 2017 season, The model also ranked in the Top 10 on NFLPickWatch for the third year in a row on straight-up NFL picks and beat more than 96 percent of CBS Sports office pool players. Anyone who has followed it is way up. 

Now, it has broken down Cardinals vs. Niners from every angle. We can tell you it's leaning over, but it also says one side of the spread cashes in more than 50 percent of simulations. You can only see that pick at SportsLine. 

The model knows that the 49ers are aiming to get to 8-0 behind one of the top defenses in football. San Francisco allows just 11 points per game (only New England's 7.6 is lower) and allows an NFL-best 254.6 yards per game. And with seven sacks, Niners defensive end Nick Bosa is a strong candidate for Rookie of the Year as well as a long shot pick for Defensive Player of the Year.

The league's second-best rushing attack, San Francisco is led offensively by running back Matt Breida's 446 rushing yards on 84 carries and one touchdown, with backfield mate Tevin Coleman adding 332 rushing yards on 71 yards and five touchdowns.

But just because San Francisco dominates on both sides of the ball doesn't mean it will cover the 49ers vs. Cardinals spread on Thursday Night Football.

With a first-year coach in Kliff Kingsbury and a rookie quarterback in Kyler Murray, the Cardinals have had growing pains on offense. But Murray, who has completed 63.7 percent of his passes for 1,988 yards, has a veteran target in wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald, who has 38 catches for 448 yards and two touchdowns. Second-year receiver Christian Kirk had eight receptions for 79 yards last week and has 32 for 321 this season despite missing three games. 

The Cardinals are allowing 27.9 points per game, but they are plus-three in turnover margin and have 22 sacks. The linebackers are the strength of the unit, with Chandler Jones third in the league with 8.5 sacks, Jordan Hicks second with 79 tackles and Haason Reddick posting 57 tackles, a sack and a fumble recovery. Safety Budda Baker is second on the team with 63 tackles, and Byron Murphy has five passes defended playing opposite shutdown corner Patrick Peterson.

So who wins Niners vs. Cardinals? And which side of the spread can you bank on in over 50 percent of simulations? Visit SportsLine right now to find out which side of the 49ers vs. Cardinals spread you should be all over on Thursday Night Football, all from the model that has returned over $7,000 on its top-rated NFL picks.

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Video Appears to Show Sparking Power Line Moments Before Easy Fire Erupted - KTLA Los Angeles

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  1. Video Appears to Show Sparking Power Line Moments Before Easy Fire Erupted  KTLA Los Angeles
  2. Southern California Edison power line was active near origin of Easy fire  OCRegister
  3. Getty fire may have started with branch blown onto LADWP power lines, LA officials say  LA Daily News
  4. PG&E says its power lines may have started 2 fires in California over the weekend  CNBC
  5. View full coverage on Google News


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SCE power line was active near origin of Easy fire - OCRegister

A Southern California Edison transmission line was active at the time the Easy fire broke out Wednesday in Simi Valley, officials said Thursday morning.

The blaze has scorched at least 1,700 acres while threatening thousands of homes and the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library. It was 10% contained Thursday morning.

The disclosure came Wednesday afternoon, when the Rosemead-based utiltiy informed the California Public Utilities Commission of the active line in the area near where the fire broke out — Easy Street and Los Angeles Avenue, about 4 miles north of the Reagan Library.

  • Firefighters move into heavy smoke along Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Firefighters battle the Easy Fire near the 23 Freeway in Simi Valley. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

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  • Ranchers work to get a horse evacuated along Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • A firefighter battles the Easy Fire near the 23 Freeway in Simi Valley. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • A firefighter tries to keep up with this hot spot along Olsen Road in Simi Valley Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2019, as crews tried to protect the nearby Reagan Library. (Photo by Mike Meadows/Special to the Los Angeles Daily News)

  • The burned hillsides surrounding the Ronald Reagan Library on Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • This photo from video provided by KTLA-TV shows the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library as flames from the Easy fire approach in Simi Valley, Calif., Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2019. The new wildfire erupted in wind-whipped Southern California, forcing the evacuation of the Library and nearby homes, as both ends of the state struggled with blazes, dangerously gusty weather and deliberate blackouts. Library spokeswoman Melissa Giller said the hilltop museum was safe (KTLA-TV via AP)

  • A banner at the entrance to the Ronald Reagan Library as as a helicopter flies over the burned hills on Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • An LA County firefighter tries to keep his helmet from flying off in the high winds Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2019, as he hoses down hot spots along Tierra Rejada Road in Simi Valley during the battle against the Easy fire. (Photo by Mike Meadows/Special to the Los Angeles Daily News)

  • Firefighters battling the Easy fire attack a huge hot spot Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2019, along Olsen Road in Simi Valley. They were able to put it out with the help of water-dropping helicopters. (Photo by Mike Meadows/Special to the Los Angeles Daily News)

  • Ventura battalion Chief Kris McDonald keeps an eye on flames near a ranch in the 1400 block of Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Firefighters attack flames along Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Ranchers work to evacuate horses along Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Ranchers work to evacuate horses along Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Trisha Trifonovich and Jennifer Porta protect themselves from smoke and wind along Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • A firefighter attacks flames along Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Ranchers work to evacuate horses along Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • A firefighter battles smoke and flames along Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Firefighters work to protect a home on a ranch in the 1400 block of Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Ventura battalion Chief Kris McDonald drive past flames near a ranch in the 1400 block of Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Firefighters work on flames on a ranch in the 1400 block of Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Firefighters work on a pile of burning wood near a ranch in the 1400 block of Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Firefighters work on a pile of burning wood near a ranch in the 1400 block of Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Trisha Trifonovich and Jennifer Porta evacuate a goat in the 1200 block of Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Ranch hands work on putting out hot spots along Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Trisha Trifonovich and Jennifer Porta evacuate a goat in the 1200 block of Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Firefighters attack flames along Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Flames erupt in palm trees along Tierra Rejada road as the Easy fire swept into the area Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • An LA County firefighter and camp fire crew works hotspots along the high and dry grasses on the Mureau fire in Calabasas after air crews from the Easy fire quickly made water drops and knocked it out on Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Pasadena Star-News/SCNG)

  • LA County Fire Cpt. Mike Goudchaux makes his way through the high and dry grasses along the Mureau fire in Calabasas after air crews from the Easy fire quickly made water drops and knocked it out on Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Pasadena Star-News/SCNG)

  • LA County Fire hand crew works on hotspots along the high and dry grasses on the Mureau fire in Calabasas after air crews from the Easy fire quickly made water drops and knocked it out on Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Pasadena Star-News/SCNG)

  • LA County Fire’s Camp 13, an all-female hand crew out of Malibu, work hotspots along the high and dry grasses on the Mureau fire in Calabasas after air crews from the Easy fire quickly made water drops and knocked it out on Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Pasadena Star-News/SCNG)

  • LA County Fire’s Camp 13, an all-female hand crew out of Malibu, work hotspots along the high and dry grasses on the Mureau fire in Calabasas after air crews from the Easy fire quickly made water drops and knocked it out on Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by Sarah Reingewirtz, Pasadena Star-News/SCNG)

  • Firefighters battle the Easy Fire in Simi Valley near the Ronald Reagan Library on Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Firefighters battle the Easy Fire in Simi Valley near the Ronald Reagan Library on Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Firefighters battle the Easy Fire in Simi Valley near the Ronald Reagan Library on Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • A helicopter fills up with water at a reservoir in Wood Ranch to battle the Easy Fire near the Ronald Reagan Library on Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Arson investigators were looking at the site of a burned homeless encampment near Easy Street and Madera Road, near where the Easy fire in Simi Valley may have started on Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Arson investigators are looking at the site of a burned homeless encampment near Easy St. and Madera Rd. as where the Easy Fire in Simi Valley may have started on Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Bobby Green and Joe Lautman talk about the Easy fire as it burned through their encampment on Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Looking at the Easy fire from the Ronald Reagan Library on Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Firefighters battle the Easy Fire in Simi Valley near the Ronald Reagan Library on Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • A helicopter makes a water drop on the Easy fire Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2019, as it burns close to the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley. (Photo by Jacob Salzman/Special to the Los Angeles Daily News)

  • The burned hillsides surrounding the Ronald Reagan Library on Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

The active line is significant because it came as lines throughout Southern California and the state have been pre-emptively shut off by utilities wary that they could spark fires under extreme red flag conditions.

“On October 30, 2019, a large brush fire known as the Easy Fire was reported at approximately 6:09 a.m. SCE informed there was circuit activity on the Moorpark-Royal 66 kV circuit close in time to the report ofthe fire,” according to the disclosure. “SCE submits this report as it meets the subject of significant public attention or media coverage reporting requirement.”

Arson investigators are looking at the site of a burned homeless encampment near Easy St. and Madera Rd. as where the Easy Fire in Simi Valley may have started on Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

The disclosure is not an admission of a cause of the fire, but it has launched investigations by the CPUC and a review by SCE.

“While the exact origin is unkown, SCE can confirm that the reported location of the fire is in its service territory and that SCE has facilities, including a 66kV subtransmission line, that runs through that area,” said SCE spokesman Robert Villegas.

“Out of an abundance of caution, we notiifed the CPUC on Oct. 30 that near the reported time of the fire there was activity on that 66kv subtransmission line, which consistent with our public safety power shutoff protocols was not de-energized.”

Villegas did not elaborate on why the line was still active.

“It’s very early in that process,” Villegas said.

Ventura County arson investigators have been working the area for a cause.

On Wednesday, even as fierce winds drove the blaze, they had been canvassing the area near a homeless encampment, where residents there said they had seen the fire in its early stages. Power lines hang over the patch of land where the encampment sits.

This week, a report said Southern California Edison equipment was responsible for the ignition Nov. 8 of the Woolsey Fire, which destroyed 1,643 structures, killed three people and prompted the evacuation of more than 295,000 people in Los Angeles and Ventura counties, SCE said.

Fueled by some of the most powerful wind gusts of the season, the Easy fire grew Thursday to 1,723 charred acres on its second day. It’s 10% contained.

Staff reporter Olga Grigoryants contributed to this report.

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Florida vs. Georgia odds, line, spread: 2019 college football picks, predictions from expert who's 12-3 - CBS Sports

The stakes are high for the Florida Gators and Georgia Bulldogs when they renew their heated football rivalry on Saturday. Kickoff for the nationally-televised showdown comes at 3:30 p.m. ET on CBS from TIAA Bank Field in Jacksonville. The winner between the No. 6-ranked Gators (7-1, 4-1) and No. 8-ranked Bulldogs (6-1, 3-1) will take command of the SEC East race while keeping its College Football Playoff hopes alive. The loser faces an uphill climb in the conference race and will be all but eliminated from the College Football Playoff picture. Both clubs come in rested off bye weeks. The Gators outlasted South Carolina 38-27 before heading to the break, while the Bulldogs managed a 21-0 rain-soaked victory over Kentucky. The Bulldogs are 6.5-point favorites and the over-under for total points scored is 44.5 in the latest Florida vs. Georgia odds. Before finalizing your Georgia vs. Florida picks, see what SportsLine senior analyst Josh Nagel has to say. 

A Reno-based handicapper with more than 20 years of experience in the sports wagering industry, Nagel specializes in collegiate athletics and was SportsLine's top college football analyst last year. He is in the midst of another strong season for SportsLine members and heads into this week on a 10-4 run with his college football picks. What's more, he has had a sharp eye for the trajectory of these SEC programs, posting a stunning record of 12-3 on picks involving the Gators or Bulldogs over the past two seasons.

Two weeks ago, Nagel told SportsLine members that Florida (-4.5), coming off its lone defeat of the season to LSU, would outlast upstart South Carolina. He predicted the Gators' edge in firepower would be the difference and was proven correct when they used a 21-7 fourth quarter to seal the victory and cover the spread. Those who followed his advice picked up another winner and anyone who has consistently followed him is way up.

Now, Nagel has zeroed in on Georgia vs. Florida from every angle and released another confident against the spread pick that he's only sharing at SportsLine.

Nagel knows Georgia brings in one of the stingiest defensive units in the country. It allowed a season-high 20 points in the loss to South Carolina, while Notre Dame and Murray State are tied for the second-highest production by a Georgia opponent with 17 points each. The blanking of Kentucky was the Bulldogs' second shutout of the season. Although the poor weather conditions made it difficult for both teams to move the ball, Georgia limited the Wildcats to just nine first downs and 177 total yards. 

The Bulldogs broke open a scoreless tie in the second half with a powerful run game led by D'Andre Swift, who scored on runs of 39 and three yards. He finished with 179 yards on 21 carries. 

Still, a motivated Bulldogs team is far from assured of covering the Georgia vs. Florida spread against a Gators club that similarly has the SEC title and a playoff berth in its sights.

Florida's lone loss of the season came at top-ranked LSU, and the Gators had plenty of positives to take away from the 42-28 defeat. They gained 459 yards of total offense and led much of the way before the Tigers ended the game with three straight touchdowns.

The Gators avoided a potential letdown spot in a hostile environment against a South Carolina club that was seeking its second straight upset. Quarterback Kyle Trask was an efficient 21-of-33 for 200 yards and four touchdowns against one pick. 

We can tell you Nagel is leaning over, but he's also identified the critical x-factor that has him all over one side of the spread. He's only sharing what it is, and who to back, at SportsLine.

Who wins Florida vs. Georgia? And what critical x-factor makes one side of the spread a must-back? Visit SportsLine now to see which side of the Florida vs. Georgia spread you should jump on Saturday, all from the seasoned expert who has hit 80 percent of his picks on these teams, and find out.

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Southern California Edison power line was active near origin of Easy fire - LA Daily News

A Southern California Edison transmission line was active at the time the Easy fire broke out Wednesday in Simi Valley, officials said Thursday morning.

The blaze has scorched at least 1,700 acres while threatening thousands of homes and the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library. It was 10% contained Thursday morning.

The disclosure came Wednesday afternoon, when the Rosemead-based utiltiy informed the California Public Utilities Commission of the active line in the area near where the fire broke out — Easy Street and Los Angeles Avenue, about 4 miles north of the Reagan Library.

The active line is significant because it came as lines throughout Southern California and the state have been pre-emptively shut off by utilities wary that they could spark fires under extreme red flag conditions.

“On October 30, 2019, a large brush fire known as the Easy Fire was reported at approximately 6:09 a.m. SCE informed there was circuit activity on the Moorpark-Royal 66 kV circuit close in time to the report ofthe fire,” according to the disclosure. “SCE submits this report as it meets the subject of significant public attention or media coverage reporting requirement.”

Arson investigators are looking at the site of a burned homeless encampment near Easy St. and Madera Rd. as where the Easy Fire in Simi Valley may have started on Wednesday, October 30, 2019. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

The disclosure is not an admission of a cause of the fire, but it has launched investigations by the CPUC and a review by SCE.

“While the exact origin is unkown, SCE can confirm that the reported location of the fire is in its service territory and that SCE has facilities, including a 66kV subtransmission line, that runs through that area,” said SCE spokesman Robert Villegas.

“Out of an abundance of caution, we notiifed the CPUC on Oct. 30 that near the reported time of the fire there was activity on that 66kv subtransmission line, which consistent with our public safety power shutoff protocols was not de-energized.”

Villegas did not elaborate on why the line was still active.

“It’s very early in that process,” Villegas said.

Ventura County arson investigators have been working the area for a cause.

On Wednesday, even as fierce winds drove the blaze, they had been canvassing the area near a homeless encampment, where residents there said they had seen the fire in its early stages. Power lines hang over the patch of land where the encampment sits.

This week, a report said Southern California Edison equipment was responsible for the ignition Nov. 8 of the Woolsey Fire, which destroyed 1,643 structures, killed three people and prompted the evacuation of more than 295,000 people in Los Angeles and Ventura counties, SCE said.

Fueled by some of the most powerful wind gusts of the season, the Easy fire grew Thursday to 1,723 charred acres on its second day. It’s 10% contained.

Staff reporter Olga Grigoryants contributed to this report.

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Crossing the line - Science Magazine

Summary

Russian geneticist Denis Rebrikov has stirred international controversy by pursuing an experiment that many believe is premature and dangerous: using the genome editor CRISPR to modify a gene in human embryos with the intention of bringing them to term. Science went to Russia to meet with Rebrikov, geneticists, government officials, and bioethicists, many of whom are sharply critical of the idea. Rebrikov spelled out his detailed, step-by-step scientific plan to correct a mutation that causes deafness. He insisted he would not attempt to move forward without supporting data, as well as ethical and regulatory review and approval.

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College Football Playoff Hopes On The Line For Florida, Georgia In Week Ten - Forbes

What to expect from college basketball's new 3-point line - ESPN

For the second time in just over a decade, the NCAA has moved the 3-point line away from the basket. Starting with the 2019-20 season, men's Division I basketball will use the same distance for 3s as the one seen in FIBA competitions.

The new 3-point distance is 22 feet and 1.75 inches from the center of the basket, meaning the line is being pushed back by more than 16 inches. This change is a bit more significant than what we saw before the 2008-09 season, when the line was moved out one foot. The current change represents roughly a 7% increase in distance, whereas the previous revision clocked in at a 5% increase.

Fans of Penn State and Texas, for example, are already familiar with the "new" 3-point line, because those teams won the 2018 NIT and 2019 NIT, respectively. The NIT used the new line in each of the past two seasons to give the NCAA data on what the change would mean. Based in part on that information, the NCAA decided to make the move.

Here's what you can expect to see this season with a new 3-point line:

The new line will become a nontopic almost immediately

We may hear about the new 3-point distance when and if a top-25 team has a dreadful shooting night from the perimeter in November, but otherwise there will be much more to talk about than a line on the floor. This is how the change played out at the beginning of the 2008-09 season, and it's also what took place during the new line's experimental use in the 2018 and 2019 NITs.

The change was made in hopes of improving quality of play

One hope behind the new line is that it will space the floor and allow offenses more room for drives and for cutting without the ball. Freedom of movement has been an NCAA point of emphasis for years now, and the new line is the latest reform aimed, in part, at furthering that particular goal. The thinking here is that, paradoxically, making 3-point shots longer and thus more difficult to make can actually benefit offenses at the expense of defenses.

This is more or less what we saw in the NIT in 2018 and 2019. Predictably, 3-point accuracy suffered a bit with the new line, as shooters made just 33.5% of their tries from the perimeter. Nevertheless, overall efficiency on offense was fine, as teams across the two tournaments averaged 1.05 points per possession, a hair better than the 1.04 listed at kenpom.com as the figure for Division I as a whole in 2018-19.

One stat to watch across the entirety of Division I this season would seem, at first glance, to have little to do with 3-point shooting. Just the same, watch the collective turnover rate posted by all 353 teams. In the 2019 NIT, for example, that number checked in at a notably low 16.6% and fueled a good deal of the efficiency displayed by the competing offenses.

High-volume 3-point shooters will likely keep doing what they do with little adverse effect

The last time the 3-point line was moved, Stephen Curry was in the middle of his career at Davidson. As a sophomore in 2007-08, he set a record that still stands by making 162 3-point shots in a single season. The line was then moved before his junior season, and Curry hit 130 3-pointers. That looks like a big drop, but keep in mind Curry's junior year still ranks among the top 40 3-point shooting seasons for volume by any player (with either line) since 1992-93, according to data at sports-reference.com.

(It is also worth noting that Curry went from playing combo or shooting guard to point guard over the course of those two seasons. As always, there are more factors in play behind 3-point production than simply the location of the line.)

If we define a "high-volume" 3-point shooting season as one in which a player makes 95 or more 3s, we find that there will be, on average, about 30 of those players nationwide in any given 21st-century season. The last time the 3-point line was moved, the number of high-volume shooters declined from 2007-08 to 2008-09, but only very slightly, from 40 to 36. This season, looking at high-volume shooters like Detroit Mercy's Antoine Davis or Marquette's Markus Howard, it's reasonable to expect that they will, for the most part, just keep doing what they do, even with a new 3-point line.

Average and less effective shooters will be hit hardest

The share of Division I shot attempts that are launched from behind the 3-point line will in all probability drop this season, and a large part of that shift will be players (and coaches) saying no to shots from more than 22 feet out when those same shooters might have said yes from less than 21 feet.

The best and most confident outside shooters were, of course, already taking a healthy share of their attempts from beyond 22 feet even with the "old" line. Conversely, it's a given team's second and, especially, third, fourth and sometimes fifth perimeter options who will now be thinking twice about taking that 3.

With a new 3-point line for 2019-20, teams will have one more thing to think about, particularly early in the season. If history is any guide, however, the new line will soon be accepted, 3-point attempt rates will tick downward initially and then eventually resume their upward climb, and fans will quickly go back to arguing over whether a team should foul when up 3 in the closing seconds.

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West Virginia vs. Baylor odds, line, spread: 2019 college football picks, predictions from expert who's 18-9 - CBS Sports

The Bears will try to make a statement and stay perfect when No. 12 Baylor hosts the West Virginia Mountaineers on Thursday night. Both teams are coming off a bye week, with the Mountaineers falling to Oklahoma in their last outing. Baylor, meanwhile, moved to 7-0 by amassing 536 yards and forcing three turnovers in a 45-27 victory at Oklahoma State. The Bears are loaded with talent at the skill positions and adept at forcing the other team into mistakes. Thursday's kickoff is set for 8 p.m. ET at McLane Stadium. The Bears are 18.5-point favorites in the latest West Virginia vs. Baylor odds, while the over-under for total points scored is 57. Before locking in your Baylor vs. West Virginia picks, make sure you see the college football predictions from SportsLine expert Mike Tierney.

The veteran sportswriter, whose work has appeared in The New York Times and Los Angeles Times, has covered college football at all levels for decades. He has emerged as one of SportsLine's leading analysts in all sports.

What's more, he has had a particularly keen sense for the tendencies of these programs. Tierney is 4-0 in his last four against the spread picks involving the Mountaineers and 18-9 on his last 27 college football picks overall. Anyone who has followed him is way up.

Now, he has studied West Virginia vs. Baylor from every angle and released another confident against the spread pick that is only available at SportsLine.

Tierney knows the Bears' offense puts up big numbers, averaging 484.1 yards and 38.9 points per game. Quarterback Charlie Brewer is 25th in the nation in completion percentage at 66.3 and 32nd in passing yards with 1,866. He has 12 touchdowns and just three interceptions, and it helps to have a pair of 500-yard receivers in Denzel Mims (33 catches for 519 and five TDs) and Tyquan Thornton (26-507-3). The Bears also have a dynamic duo at running back, with John Lovett (446 yards, four TDs, 6.9 yards per carry) and JaMycal Hasty (362-4-6.5) sharing the load.

Baylor has blocked four kicks, recovered seven fumbles and has a plus-six turnover margin. The Mountaineers have minus-four turnover differential, and West Virginia quarterback Austin Kendall has thrown seven interceptions and been sacked nine times. Defensive tackle James Lynch is fifth in the nation with 8.5 sacks, and Clay Johnston has 2.5 to go with his team-high 58 tackles.

But just because the Bears make big plays on both sides of the ball doesn't mean they will cover the Baylor vs. West Virginia spread on Thursday night.

West Virginia's top linebacker, Josh Chandler, is out with a knee injury, but there is plenty of talent in the secondary to step up. Cornerback Josh Norwood leads the team with 52 tackles and six passes defended, and safety Sean Mahone has 33 tackles. Freshman safety Tykee Smith has three passes defended and one interception, which he took back 19 yards for a touchdown. Keith Washington has three interceptions despite missing the past two games, but is expected to return this week.  

Offensively, Kendall is completing 63.5 percent of his passes and has thrown for 1,429 yards and 11 touchdowns. Kendall relies heavily on receivers T.J. Simmons and Sam James, who have combined for 72 catches, 797 yards and six scores.

We can tell you Tierney is leaning over, and he's also identified a critical x-factor that has him all over one side of the spread. He's only sharing what it is, and who to back, at SportsLine.

Who wins West Virginia vs. Baylor? And what critical x-factor makes one side of the spread a must-back? Visit SportsLine now to see which side of the West Virginia vs. Baylor spread you should jump on Thursday, all from the seasoned expert who is 18-9 on college football picks, and find out.

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West Virginia vs. Baylor odds, line, spread: 2019 college football picks, predictions from expert who's 18-9 - CBS Sports
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